184 research outputs found
Diffuse somatostatin-immunoreactive D-cell hyperplasia in the stomach and duodenum
This paper presents the first case of extensive, diffuse, somatostatin- immunoreactive D-cell hyperplasia in the human stomach and duodenum. It occurred in a 37-yr-old woman, who showed clinical signs of dwarfism, obesity, dryness of the mouth, and goiter. The density of the distribution of D cells was increased 39-fold in the stomach fundus, 23- fold in the proximal antrum, 25-fold in the distal antrum, and 31-fold in the upper duodenum in comparison with normal values. At the same time, the gastrin-immunoreactive cells were increased 2.3-fold in the antrum. Although the range in size of the D cells was within normal limits in all regions examined, the G cells showed pronounced hypertrophy of up to 127%. A possible relationship between the immuno- histochemical findings and the clinical picture is discussed
Fatalities due to intestinal obstruction following the ingestion of foreign bodies
Two fatalities due to an occlusive ileus following the ingestion of foreign bodies in patients with psychiatric disorders are described. A severely mentally handicapped young man developed a temperature and died 1 h after admission to a surgical ward. At autopsy, not, vert, similar 2000 cm3 of foreign material, including broken glass and porcelain, branches, buttons, parts of clothing and other material were found in the gastrointestinal tract, leading to a complete obstruction of the distal intestine and colon with resulting faecal vomiting. The other case was even more unusual as a hair fetishist had swallowed a thick strand of his own hair, 50 cm long, also resulting in mechanical obstruction of the distal intestine
Global Optimization by Energy Landscape Paving
We introduce a novel heuristic global optimization method, energy landscape
paving (ELP), which combines core ideas from energy surface deformation and
tabu search. In appropriate limits, ELP reduces to existing techniques. The
approach is very general and flexible and is illustrated here on two protein
folding problems. For these examples, the technique gives faster convergence to
the global minimum than previous approaches.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. (2002
A One-Step Strategy for End-Functionalized Donor–Acceptor Conjugated Polymers
A modular and robust method for preparing end-functionalized donor–acceptor (D–A) narrow bandgap conjugated polymers is reported that avoids multistep reactions and postpolymerization modification. The strategy is well-controlled and affords functional materials with predictable molecular weight and high end-group fidelity. To exemplify this synthetic strategy, narrow bandgap conjugated polymers based on PDPP2FT were prepared that contain perylene diimide (PDI) units at the chain-ends. Monte Carlo simulations confirm the high degree of chain-end functionalization while photoluminescence studies reveal the unique photophysical properties of the end-functional polymers with efficient charge transfer occurring between the main polymer chain and PDI end-groups that results exclusively from their covalent linkage
Evolution of Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging Signal Abnormality in Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, With Histopathological Correlation
IMPORTANCE: Prion diseases represent the archetype of brain diseases caused by protein misfolding, with the most common subtype being sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD), a rapidly progressive dementia. Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) has emerged as the most sensitive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequence for the diagnosis of sCJD, but few studies have assessed the evolution of MRI signal as the disease progresses. OBJECTIVES: To assess the natural history of the MRI signal abnormalities on DWI in sCJD to improve our understanding of the pathogenesis and to investigate the potential of DWI as a biomarker of disease progression, with histopathological correlation. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Gray matter involvement on DWI was assessed among 37 patients with sCJD in 26 cortical and 5 subcortical subdivisions per hemisphere using a semiquantitative scoring system of 0 to 2 at baseline and follow-up. A total brain score was calculated as the summed scores in the individual regions. In 7 patients, serial mean diffusivity measurements were obtained. Age at baseline MRI, disease duration, atrophy, codon 129 methionine valine polymorphism, Medical Research Council Rating Scale score, and histopathological findings were documented. The study setting was the National Prion Clinic, London, England. All participants had a probable or definite diagnosis of sCJD and had at least 2 MRI studies performed during the course of their illness. The study dates were October 1, 2008 to April 1, 2012. The dates of our analysis were January 19 to April 20, 2012. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Correlation of regional and total brain scores with disease duration. RESULTS: Among the 37 patients with sCJD in this study there was a significant increase in the number of regions demonstrating signal abnormality during the study period, with 59 of 62 regions showing increased signal intensity (SI) at follow-up, most substantially in the caudate and putamen (P < .001 for both). The increase in the mean (SD) total brain score from 30.2 (17.3) at baseline to 40.5 (20.6) at follow-up (P = .001) correlated with disease duration (r = 0.47, P = .003 at baseline and r = 0.35, P = .03 at follow-up), and the left frontal SI correlated with the degree of spongiosis (r = 0.64, P = .047). Decreased mean diffusivity in the left caudate at follow-up was seen (P < .001). Eight patients demonstrated decreased SI in cortical regions, including the left inferior temporal gyrus and the right lingual gyrus. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Magnetic resonance images in sCJD show increased extent and degree of SI on DWI that correlates with disease duration and the degree of spongiosis. Although cortical SI may fluctuate, increased basal ganglia SI is a consistent finding and is due to restricted diffusion. Diffusion-weighted imaging in the basal ganglia may provide a noninvasive biomarker in future therapeutic trials
Control and ultrasonic actuation of a gas-liquid interface in a microfluidic chip
This article describes the design and manufacturing of a microfluidic chip,
allowing for the actuation of a gas-liquid interface and of the neighboring
fluid. A first way to control the interface motion is to apply a pressure
difference across it. In this case, the efficiency of three different
micro-geometries at anchoring the interface is compared. Also, the critical
pressures needed to move the interface are measured and compared to theoretical
result. A second way to control the interface motion is by ultrasonic
excitation. When the excitation is weak, the interface exhibits traveling
waves, which follow a dispersion equation. At stronger ultrasonic levels,
standing waves appear on the interface, with frequencies that are half integer
multiple of the excitation frequency. An associated microstreaming flow field
observed in the vicinity of the interface is characterized. The meniscus and
associated streaming flow have the potential to transport particles and mix
reagents
Metropolis simulations of Met-Enkephalin with solvent-accessible area parameterizations
We investigate the solvent-accessible area method by means of Metropolis
simulations of the brain peptide Met-Enkephalin at 300. For the energy
function ECEPP/2 nine atomic solvation parameter (ASP) sets are studied. The
simulations are compared with one another, with simulations with a distance
dependent electrostatic permittivity , and with vacuum
simulations (). Parallel tempering and the biased Metropolis
techniques RM are employed and their performance is evaluated. The measured
observables include energy and dihedral probability densities (pds), integrated
autocorrelation times, and acceptance rates. Two of the ASP sets turn out to be
unsuitable for these simulations. For all other systems selected configurations
are minimized in search of the global energy minima, which are found for the
vacuum and the system, but for none of the ASP models. Other
observables show a remarkable dependence on the ASPs. In particular, we find
three ASP sets for which the autocorrelations at 300K are considerably
smaller than for vacuum simulations.Comment: 10 pages and 8 figure
Trapped electron coupled to superconducting devices
We propose to couple a trapped single electron to superconducting structures
located at a variable distance from the electron. The electron is captured in a
cryogenic Penning trap using electric fields and a static magnetic field in the
Tesla range. Measurements on the electron will allow investigating the
properties of the superconductor such as vortex structure, damping and
decoherence. We propose to couple a superconducting microwave resonator to the
electron in order to realize a circuit QED-like experiment, as well as to
couple superconducting Josephson junctions or superconducting quantum
interferometers (SQUIDs) to the electron. The electron may also be coupled to a
vortex which is situated in a double well potential, realized by nearby pinning
centers in the superconductor, acting as a quantum mechanical two level system
that can be controlled by a transport current tilting the double well
potential. When the vortex is trapped in the interferometer arms of a SQUID,
this would allow its detection both by the SQUID and by the electron.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
A One-Step Strategy for End-Functionalized Donor–Acceptor Conjugated Polymers
A modular and robust method for preparing end-functionalized donor–acceptor (D–A) narrow bandgap conjugated polymers is reported that avoids multistep reactions and postpolymerization modification. The strategy is well-controlled and affords functional materials with predictable molecular weight and high end-group fidelity. To exemplify this synthetic strategy, narrow bandgap conjugated polymers based on PDPP2FT were prepared that contain perylene diimide (PDI) units at the chain-ends. Monte Carlo simulations confirm the high degree of chain-end functionalization while photoluminescence studies reveal the unique photophysical properties of the end-functional polymers with efficient charge transfer occurring between the main polymer chain and PDI end-groups that results exclusively from their covalent linkage
Evidences of vortex curvature and anisotropic pinning in superconducting films by quantitative magneto-optics
We present the experimental observation of magnetic field line curvature at
the surface of a superconducting film by local quantitative magneto-optics. In
addition to the knowledge of the full induction field at the superconductor
surface yielding the quantitative observation of the flux line curvature, our
analysis method allows also local value measurements of the electrical current
density inside the sample. Thus, we study the interplay between the
electrodynamic constraints dictated by the film geometry and the pinning
properties of the superconductor. In particular, we investigate the anisotropic
vortex-pinning, due to columnar defects introduced by heavy ion irradiation, as
revealed in the local current density dependence on the vortex curvature during
magnetic flux diffusion inside the superconducting film.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, to be submitted to Phys. Rev.
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